One of the enduring problems with Eudora is its lack of support for modern SSL; another is its root certificate store, which was last updated in 2005. In the past, workarounds (such as tunnelling through with Stunnel) were therefore necessary for Eudora to authenticate and interface with SMTP servers. As of to-day, that is no longer the case.

The HERMES project has just released updated binaries for QCSSL (Eudora's OpenSSL driver) and an updated root cert store, all in one .ZIP file for easy installation. Simply download it at https://sourceforge.net/projects/hermesmail/files/hermssl.zip/download and extract it to your Eudora program files directory.

What's this you hear about HERMES? Well, our over-riding goal is to release a true successor to Eudora 7.1, the last real version of QUALCOMM Eudora. For legal reasons, we can't *call* it Eudora, so it's been rechristened HERMES Mail, but it is based on the same great codebase and might as well be called Eudora Lazarus Edition.

Of course, the magnitude of the project is comparable to what Herakles had to deal with when made to tidy up King Augeas' stables. It could not, and can not, be done without the support of the Eudora user community. This support can come in one of two forms: labour and money. If you are capable of contributing labour (i.e. you can code in C++), we need that most of all; feel free to contact me at ***@gmail.com. You can also contribute money through PayPal (same address); it'll be disbursed appropriately and absolutely, positively won't go up my nose. Finally, we have a Kickstarter, which is available at https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1313324524/hermes-eudoras-next-generation?ref=user_menu

Post by n***@gmail.comOne of the enduring problems with Eudora is its lack of support for modern SSL; another is its root certificate store, which was last updated in 2005. In the past, workarounds (such as tunnelling through with Stunnel) were therefore necessary for Eudora to authenticate and interface with SMTP servers. As of to-day, that is no longer the case.The HERMES project has just released updated binaries for QCSSL (Eudora's OpenSSL driver) and an updated root cert store, all in one .ZIP file for easy installation. Simply download it at https://sourceforge.net/projects/hermesmail/files/hermssl.zip/download and extract it to your Eudora program files directory.

Haven't tried it myself but initial reports from the Eudora Listmom'slist are not encouraging. Think I'll wait and see.

What level of beta (or even alpha) testing do you do with this stuffbefore releasing it?

Post by n***@gmail.comOne of the enduring problems with Eudora is its lack of support for modern SSL; another is its root certificate store, which was last updated in 2005. In the past, workarounds (such as tunnelling through with Stunnel) were therefore necessary for Eudora to authenticate and interface with SMTP servers. As of to-day, that is no longer the case.The HERMES project has just released updated binaries for QCSSL (Eudora's OpenSSL driver) and an updated root cert store, all in one .ZIP file for easy installation. Simply download it at https://sourceforge.net/projects/hermesmail/files/hermssl.zip/download and extract it to your Eudora program files directory.

Haven't tried it myself but initial reports from the Eudora Listmom'slist are not encouraging. Think I'll wait and see.What level of beta (or even alpha) testing do you do with this stuffbefore releasing it?

The HERMES project in general IS alpha quality, as the SourceForge page ought to tell you, BUT! The QCSSL.DLL I put together with Pete MacLean is actually the gamma release. The problems the Listmoms people were having stemmed from an error I made. I accidentally used the wrong version of OpenSSL. That was fixed within an hour of the first error report. If you download it now and follow the instructions in the readme, it WILL work.

Post by n***@gmail.comOne of the enduring problems with Eudora is its lack of support for modern SSL; another is its root certificate store, which was last updated in 2005. In the past, workarounds (such as tunnelling through with Stunnel) were therefore necessary for Eudora to authenticate and interface with SMTP servers. As of to-day, that is no longer the case.The HERMES project has just released updated binaries for QCSSL (Eudora's OpenSSL driver) and an updated root cert store, all in one .ZIP file for easy installation. Simply download it at https://sourceforge.net/projects/hermesmail/files/hermssl.zip/download and extract it to your Eudora program files directory.

Haven't tried it myself but initial reports from the Eudora Listmom'slist are not encouraging. Think I'll wait and see.What level of beta (or even alpha) testing do you do with this stuffbefore releasing it?

The HERMES project in general IS alpha quality, as the SourceForge page ought to tell you, BUT! The QCSSL.DLL I put together with Pete MacLean is actually the gamma release. The problems the Listmoms people were having stemmed from an error I made. I accidentally used the wrong version of OpenSSL. That was fixed within an hour of the first error report. If you download it now and follow the instructions in the readme, it WILL work.

I've tried the update twice, on two different Win 7 systems (64-bit), and it doesn't work on either one of them. I downloaded the updated HermSSL.zip & copied the four x64 files into the Eudora directory... still doesn't work. Can't connect to any of my email providers, with "Error reading from network." Both my Win 7 systems have Microsoft C++ 2015 version installed. I was somewhat surprised the new QCSSL.dll file was only 79kB in size, whereas the original QCSSL.dll file is 496kB in size.

I believe you ..... but fwiw, "alpha" to me (I'm old school) is anissue released for in house "lab" test only; before any release toend-users. "Beta" is a limited release to selected end-users to getwider field experience before general, public release.

In this case, with the limited user base for Eudora, the "selectedend-users" is likely to comprise that whole user base and I don'tminimise your difficulty in that respect. However, I don't believe thatany software producer should release alpha quality material to end-usersand the fact of doing so in this case probably explains a lot of thecurrent difficulty.

Post by Sid ElbowWhat level of beta (or even alpha) testing do you do with this stuffbefore releasing it?

Evidently none. After finally obtaining the download URL, downloading,unzipping and copying the drivers to my Eudora directory under Program Files(x86), Eudora could no longer retrieve my mail regardless of server settings.After looking forward to this problem being solved, I reluctantly reverted tomy original SSL certificates and drivers.